Lots of recreational golfers have the right instinct about what’s wrong with their swing. But issues arise when they apply a superficial “solution” that doesn’t address the actual issues in their swings.
The best example? Tons of amateurs “scoop” the clubhead as they make impact with the ball. It translates into weak contact with too much loft and (usually) an open clubface. It only takes a few of those shots before you start trying to do something to address it.
Usually, that means shoving the handle toward the target in an effort to remove the scooping motion. You might be able to get away with that on a short pitch or chip, but when you add length and speed to the swing, that handle shove actually makes you scoop it more because your body responds by backing out of the shot. This will have you dumping the clubhead just to avoid hitting the ground six inches behind the ball.
In reality, the root cause of scooping at impact often has nothing to do with your hands or your release. It happens because you aren’t rotating in a way that moves the low point in front of the ball, which promotes proper compression of the ball at impact.
Advertisement
Working with my teaching partner Morgan Hale, we addressed this exact problem in the video below. The student was stalling his rotation, standing up out of his posture and using his hands to try to create more speed through impact — but that doesn’t work!
To help fix the issue, we gave him three easy drills to improve his rotation, create a real pivot and get his low point more in front of the ball. If you struggle with scooping your irons at impact, they may help you, too.
“>
Advertisement
3 drills for better compression
1. Stretch and turn
Pull an exercise band against your chest by extending your arms completely, then make slow backswings and through-swings as you keep the band fully stretched. If you stop rotating or make an over-the-top move, you’ll instantly lose the stretch on the band.
2. Push with precision
Lots of people do a good job pushing with their trail foot during the downswing, but when they do it, they slide everything toward the target. Pushing is good, but you need to add in the feel of pushing your lead hip back to get the proper turn through the ball.
Advertisement
To teach yourself this feel, have a friend stand to the side and hold an alignment stick in front of your lead hip. As you make practice swings with no club, make sure you’re turning through in a way that doesn’t bump your lead hip into the club.
3. Lawn mower stretch
Another way to feel that is to have somebody stand in front of you holding the resistance band on the ground with their foot where the ball would be. Hold the other end of the band in your lead hand, and when you make your downswing, pull the band tight post-impact, like you’re starting a lawn mower. The effort it takes to create the tension will encourage you to rotate and push that lead hip back instead of sliding it toward the target.
On paper it’s top versus mid-table. In reality, the context is doing most of the talking: Glasgow could be without close to 15 frontline players, Connacht are missing Finlay Bealham plus long-term injuries, and the betting line has swung so far that Connacht are around -3 favourites after a season where they’d usually be double-digit underdogs in this match-up.
It doesn’t flatter Connacht, but the table is tighter than it looks. A win here keeps the play-off chase alive, especially with Scarlets in two weeks in what becomes a vital mini-block for points.
The Six Nations Factor
Glasgow have been the most consistent side in the URC this season — 44 points, best points difference, and a run that has them looking like champions again. But international windows change everything.
Glasgow are expected to be missing ~15 starters due to Scotland duty
The handicap has flipped from what would likely be Glasgow -10 in a normal week to Connacht -3
Leadership and cohesion are the big risks when you remove a full international spine
They’ll still be structured. They’ll still have threat. But this is the kind of week where depth gets tested properly.
Connacht Recent URC Form
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
F
A
29 Nov 2025
Sharks
Dexcom Stadium
W
44
17
20 Dec 2025
Dragons
Rodney Parade
L
28
48
27 Dec 2025
Ulster
Dexcom Stadium
L
24
29
03 Jan 2026
Leinster
Aviva Stadium
L
17
52
24 Jan 2026
Leinster
Dexcom Stadium
L
23
34
31 Jan 2026
Zebre Parma
Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi
W
31
15
Connacht have won 2 of their last 6 URC matches
The Zebre win (31–15) ended a run of four straight defeats
Connacht have lost their last two URC home matches and haven’t lost three in a row at Dexcom Stadium in the Championship since January 2021
Glasgow Recent URC Form
Date
Opponent
Venue
Result
F
A
29 Nov 2025
Scarlets
Parc y Scarlets
L
0
23
20 Dec 2025
Edinburgh
Hampden Park
W
24
12
27 Dec 2025
Edinburgh
Scottish Gas Murrayfield
W
21
3
03 Jan 2026
Zebre Parma
Scotstoun Stadium
W
47
10
24 Jan 2026
Zebre Parma
Stadio Sergio Lanfranchi
W
26
21
30 Jan 2026
Munster
Scotstoun Stadium
W
31
22
Glasgow have won 5 of their last 6 URC matches
Their only defeat in that run was 0–23 away to Scarlets
They’ve conceded just 91 points across those six matches (avg 15.2 per game)
Recent URC Meetings: Connacht v Glasgow
Date
Match
Venue
Score
22 Feb 2019
Glasgow Warriors v Connacht
Scotstoun Stadium
43–17
03 Oct 2020
Connacht v Glasgow Warriors
Dexcom Stadium
28–24
29 Jan 2022
Connacht v Glasgow Warriors
Dexcom Stadium
20–42
22 Apr 2023
Glasgow Warriors v Connacht
Scotstoun Stadium
29–27
28 Oct 2023
Connacht v Glasgow Warriors
Dexcom Stadium
34–26
26 Jan 2025
Glasgow Warriors v Connacht
Scotstoun Stadium
22–19
Connacht’s only win in the last four meetings was 34–26 in Galway in October 2023
The last meeting in Scotland was a tight one: Glasgow 22–19 Connacht (January 2025)
URC Era Record
Team
Played
Wins
Win %
Losses
Draws
Connacht
470
188
40.00%
271
11
Glasgow Warriors
486
275
56.58%
197
14
What It Means for Connacht (and Lancaster)
It’s been a rough first season for Stuart Lancaster results-wise, but the injury context matters. Connacht have been forced to lean on academy players far more than planned, and while that may pay off long-term, the URC table doesn’t wait for development stories.
This game is different. Glasgow are weakened. Connacht are closer to a settled XV than they’ve been in months. That flips the pressure.
Advertisement
With Scarlets coming in two weeks, Connacht need a points haul from this block. Beat Glasgow’s second string at home and you suddenly have a runway. Miss the chance and the season starts slipping away fast.
Key Match Angles
Tempo: Connacht should try to play at speed and stretch Glasgow’s combinations
Breakdown pressure: less settled Glasgow units can be exposed if Connacht win collisions
Game management: Connacht must control exits — Glasgow live off cheap turnover ball
Prediction
This is the kind of fixture that usually feels like a free swing. Not this week. If Connacht want the play-offs, this is one they have to take.
Connacht by 4–8 points (but only if their set-piece and exits hold up).
Ryan Garcia’s father and trainer, Henry Garcia, has outlined the determining factor for whether a showdown between his son and Shakur Stevenson gets made.
Prior to their clash, many questioned whether Garcia was in the right mental space to dethrone Barrios, a tough but technically limited world champion.
But before facing Barrios, Garcia had expressed his desire to lock horns with Stevenson, the WBO super-lightweight champion, in a bid to test himself against one of his sport’s most elite operators.
Speaking with MillCity Boxing, though, Henry Garcia has said that Stevenson must move up to 147lbs, or else they will pursue a rematch with Devin Haney.
Advertisement
“Absolutely [the Haney rematch is bigger than a Shakur Stevenson fight], by far, there is no comparison. In order for [Stevenson] to fight us, he’s going to have to come up to [147lbs]. Didn’t [Crawford] go up [to fight] Canelo [at 168lbs]? And he got respect, right?
“Why doesn’t Shakur go up to [fight] Ryan? He wants Ryan to [agree to] a catchweight. We don’t want to start going down – unless it makes sense, but I doubt it.”
Stevenson comes off a one-sided points victory over Teofimo Lopez, for which he moved up from 135lbs, and became a four-division world champion last month.
But despite Stevenson’s lofty status as a pound-for-pound star, Henry Garcia firmly believes that a rematch between his son and Haney, the WBO welterweight champion, is a much bigger fight.
Their first encounter came in April 2024, though Garcia’s majority decision victory was later overturned to a no-contest due to him testing positive for banned substance ostarine.
Michigan State’s Jeremy Fears Jr., right, guards Purdue’s Braden Smith during the second half on Tuesday, Feb. 18, 2025, at the Breslin Center in East Lansing.
In previous seasons, Michigan State and Purdue playing this late with both ranked among the nation’s top 15 would feel like the Big Ten’s most important game of the year.
But entering their only regular-season meeting on Thursday night in West Lafayette, Ind., this clash between No. 13 Michigan State (22-5, 12-4 Big Ten) and No. 8 Purdue (22-5, 12-4) has no banner-hanging implications.
With Michigan owning a commanding lead in the conference title race, the Spartans and Boilermakers are left to play for postseason seeds and bragging rights instead of league titles.
Considering Purdue and Michigan State have won the last three Big Ten crowns — and their coaches have combined for 16 league titles — this is not an insignificant concession.
“Not being able to win the Big Ten championship is tough,” said Purdue head coach Matt Painter, whose team comes off a 93-64 rout of Indiana on Friday. “That’s tough. But we’re the ones that lost the games. So we’ve got to try to get better, try to improve. I thought (Indiana) was a great bounceback for our guys, but it’s hard to take. It’s really hard to take when you have lofty goals and one of them is out the window.”
Advertisement
Purdue comes in having won five of its last six games. The only problem for the Boilermakers is that the defeat was a 91-80 home loss to Michigan, which essentially ended their hopes for a league title.
Purdue will forge on and focus on Michigan State in what will be a battle of two of the best point guards in the country.
In fact, Michigan State junior Jeremy Fears and Purdue senior Braden Smith are 1-2 in the country in assists. Fears averages 9.2 assists while Smith, who ranks fifth all-time with 994 assists, averages 8.7 per contest.
Advertisement
The Spartans are coming off back-to-back home wins over UCLA and Ohio State, but they have lost their last two road games and don’t have a signature road win yet.
After Purdue, Michigan State will have another tough road game at Indiana.
“We have to get better,” Michigan State head coach Tom Izzo said. “We talked a lot with the group about what the next couple of days are going to be like and what the next couple of weeks are going to be like. Our schedule ends about as tough as anybody’s.”
Michigan State will try to achieve that in a place that’s been a house of horrors lately.
Advertisement
The Spartans have lost their last five games at Mackey Arena — six if you count an NCAA Tournament loss to UCLA during the COVID-plagued 2020-21 season.
The last time Michigan State won at Mackey Arena was in 2014.
“Mackey Arena is one of the toughest we play in during the conference or nonconference,” Izzo said. “I think this is a really experienced Purdue team. They’ve got three guys in Smith, (Fletcher) Loyer and (Trey) Kaufman-Renn where it seems like they’ve been there forever.”
Star Thoroughbreds stands to enjoy a monumental Wednesday at the Launceston Cup, even without Denise Martin represented in the signature event.
Expect Martin’s signature purple and white to fly on the leading hopes in four races adjacent to the $250,000 Group 3 Cup, the ninth race at 5.29pm.
The Vamos Stakes (1400m), another Group 3 35 minutes pre-Cup, sees Sanniya as firm favourite, after Durazzo‘s tilt at the Listed Hellova Street Stakes (1600m) and Mazzini‘s bid in the non-Black Type $125,000 3YO Classic (1200m).
Barry Campbell, trainer for Star Thoroughbreds in Tasmania, also saddles Azonto in the 1200m benchmark 64 curtain-closer.
Advertisement
Favouritism is keenly contested among the four, Sanniya and Mazzini odds-on shots, with Sanniya pursuing five in a row while Mazzini hopes to recover from his recent four-win sequence interruption.
This three-year-old by Needs Further ran fourth at $1.16 in the $75,000 Magic Millions 3&4YO Classic (1200m) on February 6’s Tasmanian Derby undercard, and Martin later pinpointed a cause.
“When Barry took him home that night the horse ate up, he was not unsound, he was well, but we had bloods taken on him on the Monday and his iron levels were a little bit down,” Martin said.
“He had whatever is the usual supplement that vets make sure horses for blood irregularities like that have and since that time he’s been really good.”
Advertisement
At $1.90 for the 3YO Classic, Mazzini gets stall two and jockey Kelvin Sanderson.
The rest of Martin’s runners ride with Craig Newitt, featuring Sanniya – three-year-old Stratosphere daughter, six-for-seven – at $1.55 trying 1400m first up.
“Craig is adamant that she will run 1400 metres,” Martin said.
Durazzo, full brother to Mazzini, thrills with a return to Launceston (seven-for-eight record) to rectify his tight Thomas Lyons Stakes reverse against Steparty on February 8, per the Listed Thomas Lyons Stakes.
Advertisement
“He seems to enjoy Mowbray even more than Hobart and he loves 1600, so I think the owners are very keen for another contest with Steparty to see if he can turn it around.”
Only six acceptors in the Hellova Street Stakes, Durazzo widest and Steparty from barrier four.
Looking Forward, Backward and Sideways at the Vikings’ Offseason
During the NFL offseason, it is time to look forward, backward and sideways (and in this case we look at the Minnesota Vikings). There is always plenty to look forward to, as this is the season of speculation designed specifically for Purple prognostication. And, as far as the Vikings are concerned, there is a great history of individual performances, near misses and more than an odd or exceptional win/loss to discuss. The Vikings are an infinitely fascinating franchise if not ultimately a successful one (where success is often only defined by winning the Super Bowl).
But this time on the Vikings Territory Breakdown podcast, the fellas—Joe Oberle, senior writer at vikingsterritory.com and purplePTSD.com and Mark Craig, NFL and Vikings writer for the Star Tribune and startribune.com—look back in sadness to a couple of players who wore Viking purple, and are, unfortunately, no longer with us: WR Rondale Moore and defensive back Ronyell Whitaker.
Advertisement
The news of these passings brings sadness to Purple Nation, for sure. But couple the news of their passing with the death of rookie draft pick Khyree Jackson last summer, and the Vikings organization has experienced more than enough of highly emotional difficulties of late. We will pay tribute to a couple players who, though only playing a short time in Minnesota, still deserve their due.
In addition, we will look forward to free agency, the draft and the NFL Combine just on the horizon. But if you want to know what we look sideways at, well, you’ll just have to tune in and check it out. Skol!
Joe Oberle is a veteran sportswriter/editor/reporter and has covered the Vikings since 2008. The author of three books, he … More about Joe Oberle
Dec 21, 2024; Austin, Texas, USA; Texas Longhorns defensive back Malik Muhammad (5) against the Clemson Tigers during the CFP National playoff first round at Darrell K Royal-Texas Memorial Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images.
Do you consider the absolute dream candidate for the Minnesota Vikings a 3rd-Round cornerback? Probably not — but Bleacher Report does. BR’s Gary Davenport picked a “dream target” for every team in this year’s draft, and for Minnesota, that man is Texas’s Malik Muhammad.
He’s twitchy, competitive, and sticky in coverage, with the kind of edge Minnesota keeps chasing at corner.
Muhammad Would Evidently Fit Brian Flores’ CB Mold
A curveball some eight weeks before the draft.
Texas Longhorns defensive back Malik Muhammad (5) lines up during College Football Playoff first-round action against the Clemson Tigers at Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium. The young defender handled coverage duties in a high-stakes postseason matchup for Texas. Dec 21, 2024; Austin, Texas, USA: Muhammad competed in the CFP spotlight as the Longhorns hosted Clemson. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images.
BR: Muhammad Is the Vikings’ Dream Rookie
Most opened Davenport’s article expecting to find a running back like Jeremiyah Love or a cornerback like Mansoor Delane. But Davenport disagreed.
On Muhammad as the Vikings’ dream pick, he explained, “The quarterback position in Minnesota will dominate the offseason conversation surrounding the Vikings, but if the team adds competition for J.J. McCarthy this spring, it will likely come via a veteran free agent. The Vikings were stout defensively in 2025, allowing fewer passing yards per game (158.5) than any team in the NFC.”
Advertisement
“But the team has a potential issue on the back end—outside of Byron Murphy Jr. and Isaiah Rodgers, the team’s depth at the cornerback position is essentially non-existent. That should lead the Vikes to look to add a cornerback relatively early in this year’s draft, and Malik Muhammad of Texas could be an intriguing target on Day 2.”
The Consensus Big Board has Muhammad listed at No. 82 as of February 24th. A 3rd-Rounder.
Davenport continued, “A 6’0″ 188-pounder who spent the 2025 season matched up with opponents’ No. 1 receivers, Muhammad has it all — size, speed, athleticism, fluidity in coverage…you name it.”
“He also has a background in track and basketball, which can’t hurt at a position that involves a fair amount of running, jumping and whatnot.”
Advertisement
The Scouting Report
Muhammad is 6’0″ and 190 pounds. He played 41 games at Texas, logging 97 tackles, 16 passes defended, and 3 interceptions. He also has youth on his side; he won’t turn 22 until September. Muhammad is known for his versatility, twitchiness, and role as a defensive field general.
NFL Draft Buzzon Muhammad: “Muhammad brings immediate value as a defender who can contribute in multiple packages from day one. What jumps off the tape is his natural feel for route distributions and ability to process passing concepts – he sees the game unfold with veteran anticipation despite his youth.”
“Watching him navigate complex coverage assignments against elite SEC competition revealed a corner who rarely finds himself out of position and consistently plays above his experience level. His best NFL fit appears to be with defensive schemes employing pattern-match principles that maximize his instincts and football IQ.”
Advertisement
It’s worth noting that the Vikings are in the middle — hopefully near the end — of a severe drought in drafting cornerbacks. Ten years have passed since the franchise picked one of any round with staying power.
NBD added, “Coordinators who prioritize versatility in their secondary will appreciate his ability to execute both man and zone techniques with equal proficiency. While Muhammad doesn’t possess elite length, he compensates with exceptional footwork and transitional quickness that lets him mirror even the craftiest route runners.”
“The technical refinement he displays in press technique and zone spacing indicates a prospect who’s been meticulously coached. The comparison that resonates when studying Muhammad is a young Marcus Peters.”
Perhaps the Value Is Really That Great
Advertisement
Davenport must love Muhammad and his fit in Minnesota because it’s not often that a 2nd- or 3rd-Rounder pulls down “dream” draft candidate status a couple of months before the event.
So, how would Davenport’s assertion come true? Well, first, the Vikings would have to scoop Muhammad from Round 2 or 3, fitting his current stock. Thereafter, if he immediately latched on as a starter and remained for longer than a few years, Davenport would be vindicated.
Texas Longhorns defensive back Malik Muhammad (5) wraps up Georgia Bulldogs wide receiver Anthony Evans III (5) during second-quarter action at Darrell K Royal–Texas Memorial Stadium. The defensive play stopped the receiver short after a short gain in a key conference matchup. Oct 19, 2024; Austin, Texas, USA: Muhammad secured the tackle along the sideline for Texas. Mandatory Credit: Sara Diggins-USA TODAY Network via Imagn Images.
The Vikings must also get into the habit — soon — of playing rookies. In the last four years, rookies don’t often see the field in Year No. 1, with the exception of wide receiver Jordan Addison and guard Ed Ingram. For example, Minnesota drafted wideout Tai Felton in Round 3 last year; the guy barely played on offense as a rookie.
If Davenport is correct, the Vikings grab Muhammad from Round 2 or 3, and he plays right away, fans will treat him like a supreme breath of fresh air.
Other Dream Candidates
Advertisement
How about real dream draft candidates for Minnesota? Here’s a look at Round 1 rookies who would bring tremendous joy to the fan base if they [somehow] fell to Pick No. 18:
Mansoor Delane (CB, LSU)
Caleb Downs (S, Ohio State)
Jeremiyah Love (RB, Notre Dame)
Sonny Styles (LB, Ohio State)
Ohio State Buckeyes cornerback Lorenzo Styles Jr. (3) celebrates with linebacker Sonny Styles (0) after returning a punt for a touchdown during third-quarter action against the UCLA Bruins at Ohio Stadium. The brothers shared the moment on the sideline after the special teams score energized the crowd. Nov 15, 2025; Columbus, Ohio, USA: Styles finished the return with a touchdown. Mandatory Credit: Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images.
Downs, Love, and Styles live in a category of their own; they’re virtually guaranteed to be gone by Pick No. 18. Delane would turn heads, as he’s considered the top corner in the draft.
Oct 25, 2025; Starkville, Mississippi, USA; Mississippi State Bulldogs wide receiver Brenen Thompson (0) catches the ball for a touchdown over Texas Longhorns defensive back Malik Muhammad (5) during the second quarter at Davis Wade Stadium at Scott Field. Mandatory Credit: Petre Thomas-Imagn Images
Cue the lights, these men in tights are ready to steal the show at the 2026 NFL Scouting Combine.
Demond Claiborne, RB, Wake Forest
Only one running back, Notre Dame’s Jeremyiah Love, is a first-rounder. Claiborne’s shifty nature and explosive burst out of the backfield are coveted by teams shopping for change-of-pace backs. If Claiborne can run in the 4.3 range and deliver a dynamite three-cone agility test result, this weaker RB class is his for the taking.
Brenen Thompson, WR, Mississippi State
A candidate to break Xavier Worthy’s 40-yard dash record, Thompson is small and can’t do much about that. His downfield speed could cause heads to turn with a target in the 4.2s.
Ted Hurst, WR, Georgia State
Hurst’s small-school pedigree has left some wondering if he can adjust against NFL cornerbacks. If he continues to show precision and explosiveness in and out of breaks, Hurst can erase enough doubt to be in the top 64 picks.
Advertisement
Jaren Kanak, TE, Oklahoma
Some feigned surprise he was invited to Indy, but if you’ve been keying in on the Sooners, you know why Kanak is here. He will likely have one of the fastest times for the tight end position, and his defensive experience should translate to impressive bench press rep counts as well.
Gennings Dunker, OG, Iowa
Dunker’s combine performance will be a double-edged sword. He’s almost certainly going to nail his bench press reps with his yolked arms and impressive frame, but teams will be looking to see how he performs during agility drills. Everyone knows Dunker is strong. The question is, Can he move like an NFL lineman? Performing well could send him into the top 50.
Zane Durant, DT, Penn State
Aug 31, 2024; Morgantown, West Virginia, USA; Penn State Nittany Lions defensive tackle Zane Durant (28) celebrates after a stop during the third quarter against the West Virginia Mountaineers at Mountaineer Field at Milan Puskar Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Ben Queen-USA TODAY Sports
Durant’s first-step explosiveness is intense. As a speed-rushing tackle, he has a knack for penetrating inside gaps, a valued skill for a position valuing speed to power. If he can crush his 40 and agility drills, Durant won’t be easy to pass on draft day.
Peter Woods, DT, Clemson
Athletically he’s a no-doubt first-round prospect. Following a down year in terms of production, his final grade isn’t set in stone. Woods participating in the combine drills and showing off his athletic prowess would cement his stock.
Advertisement
Harold Perkins, LB, LSU
As a former five-star recruit, Perkins’ athletic pedigree should be highly valued. He currently is a mid-round prospect. With talk of him moving to edge in some schemes, timed speed and strength will be more important for Perkins than ever, especially if he’s carrying the weight to reflect his desire to play outside.
Brandon Cisse, CB, South Carolina
Cisse is looking to break into a packed conversation around corners with first-round value. The combine is his best opportunity. His size, speed and strength are exceptional. Putting numbers down on paper to match the film would mean booking himself tickets to Pittsburgh in April.
VJ Payne, S, Kansas State
The battle for the third-best safety in the class is wide open — Ohio State’s Caleb Downs is the clear-cut No. 1 and top five overall. If Payne backs up his impressive athletic traits evident on film in on-field drills and testing, he’ll be a big-time riser.
Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson filed a lawsuit against the women’s golf tour NXXT in December after it changed its policies to prevent biological males from competing against females.
NXXT and its attorneys from America First Policy Institute filed its motion to dismiss this week, and believe the suit will be thrown out.
“We are asking the courts to dismiss the claims and we’re addressing the matter,” NXXT Golf CEO Stuart McKinnon told Fox News Digital.
Advertisement
“This was about simply protecting women’s sports. So the goal was really clarity and competitive integrity, and, as a professional tour, we believe it was our responsibility to define those categories.”
Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson looks after shot at pre-qualifying stage of LPGA Q-Series.(Riley Gaines/X)
McKinnon said after the organization updated its policies, he reached out to Davidson to offer the golfer a chance to compete on the tour in an open category, free of cost, and would even pay for Davidson’s Q School – an annual, multi-stage tournament where golfers compete for playing status on the PGA Tour and Korn Ferry Tour.
“I had a talk with Davidson. And at that time, prior to the change, I had offered Davidson the opportunity to play in an open division. And in that open division, I had offered Hayley Davidson to play in that open division and even a management position in that open division, and we would allow Davidson to play for free,” McKinnon said.
Advertisement
“We would pay for Q School fees for Davidson. So we were very generous and respectful of what Davidson wanted to do. And my message to Davidson was simply that perhaps your legacy is forging the path for future generations. But it can’t be right now in this women’s tour right now, when I’m running it, and we are going to make the policy change.”
McKinnon said the trans athlete rejected the offer.
Now, his tour is engaged in a legal battle against Davidson. It was an outcome he expected when he made the policy change, but believed it was necessary based on the feedback of his golfers.
McKinnon said he came to the decision after distributing an anonymous poll to the female golfers on his tour, as the vast majority of them expressed concern over Davidson’s presence.
Advertisement
“We did an anonymous player poll, which we had a high response rate within a very short period of time. Within two or three days, we had 80% plus response rate, and it was clear that the players, you know, were speaking, that they felt the policy change was in order,” McKinnon said.
“The theme was that it was unfair, and they wanted us to address our policies.”
McKinnon said that a few female golfers expressed support for maintaining the current policy and allowing Davidson to compete.
“We just respectfully disagreed with one another,” McKinnon said.
Advertisement
McKinnon had to watch Davidson finish first place on the tour in January 2024, marking Davidson’s third first-place finish at the event. The win put Davidson in the race to earn an Epson Tour exemption, which is the developmental tour of the LPGA Tour. The top 10 players of the Epson Tour graduate to the LPGA Tour.
At the time, the LPGA’s policy allowed biological males to compete without much restriction.
NXXT was one of the first women’s tours that stepped up to make a policy change. The LPGA then changed its own policy to bring about more restrictions to protect the women’s category in December 2024.
Now, as Davidson wages a legal battle against NXXT for pioneering the protection of women’s golf, McKinnon doesn’t expect the lawsuit will impede his tour’s operations.
“Nothing has changed from an operational standpoint. We’re going to continue to grow,” McKinnon said.
“We’ve expanded the tour from the NXXT Women’s Pro Tour to the NXXT Battle Tour, which is a professional co-ed tour that we’re launching, as well our NXXT Gen Tour, which is our junior tour. It’s a competitive pathway for elite juniors, male and female. And we just actually have announced a partnership with Sir Nick Faldo for the NEXT Faldo Junior Tour. So all systems are go here at NXXT. We’re growing the pathway. We’re growing the tour.”
Transgender golfer Hailey Davidson during pre-qualifying stage of LPGA Q-Series.(Riley Gaines/X)
Fox News Digital has reached out to Davidson’s attorneys for a response.
Advertisement
Davidson’s lawsuit argues NXXT breached its contractual obligations and made false representations to Davidson, leading to wrongful exclusion from professional golf opportunities.
“Defendants breached the Contracts by implementing the Policy Change that resulted in Ms. Davidson being prohibited from participating in the entirety of the NXXT Winter Series; failing to allow Ms. Davidson to compete in any NXXT Winter Series tournaments after the Policy Change; retaining Ms. Davidson’s annual NXXT Golf membership fees and entry fees for NXXT Winter Series tournaments; and not awarding Ms. Davidson the Epson Exemptions she had earned,” the lawsuit stated.
Jackson Thompson is a sports reporter for Fox News Digital covering critical political and cultural issues in sports, with an investigative lens. Jackson’s reporting has been cited in federal government actions related to the enforcement of Title IX, and in legacy media outlets including The New York Times, The Los Angeles Times, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Associated Press and ESPN.com.
Women’s World Champion Stephanie Vaquer is currently in a relationship with an NXT star. Last year, they confirmed they were dating. While La Primera is making waves on RAW as its top titleholder, her boyfriend also won his first WWE championship this week.
The NXT star in question here is Myles Borne. On the latest episode of NXT, Borne won the NXT North American Championship. He defeated Ethan Page, ending the longest (tied with Oba Femi) NXT North American Title reign. Vaquer recently took to Instagram to express how she felt about her boyfriend’s achievement.
Thanks for the submission!
Advertisement
Vaquer wrote that she was proud of Myles Borne because she knew how hard he worked to achieve his goals. The Women’s World Champion added that Borne deserved the North American Championship win and much more. On her Instagram Story, she also posted a picture of the 26-year-old holding his newly won title.
Advertisement
“I’m so proud of you because I truly know how hard you work day after day. You deserve this and so much more [red heart emoji],” Vaquer wrote.
Stephanie Vaquer has had one of the best rookie years in WWE
Stephanie Vaquer is heading into WrestleMania 42 as the Women’s World Champion. She has had a stellar rookie year, winning a total of four titles. She first won the Women’s North American Championship from Fallon Henley. Later, she captured the NXT Women’s Championship from Giulia. At one point, she held both the titles simultaneously.
La Primera quickly transitioned to the main roster and held her ground. At Evolution, she won a 20-woman Battle Royal for a shot at the Women’s World Championship. She battled IYO SKY in possibly the best match of the night at Wrestlepalooza to capture the coveted gold.
At Crown Jewel: Perth, Stephanie Vaquer squared off against then-WWE Women’s Champion Tiffany Stratton in a Women’s Crown Jewel Title match. The RAW Superstar reigned supreme, adding another major accolade to her resume. Ahead of her match against Liv Morgan at ‘Mania, the fan-favorite star seems unstoppable.
Advertisement
Why did you not like this content?
Was this article helpful?
Advertisement
Thank You for feedback
Read all the hottest WWE news from Sportskeeda by choosing us as your preferred source. Click HERE.